126 IT HAD TO COME ;.r '" : . (;;,. -! r: 6, - 1/ ' f :::::;.'::::::: :: S OMEBODY some day had to create a stationery store that was instep with fast-movi ng New York -a store that offered the widest ra nge of stationery specialties from a place card to a ledger -- a store that was as modern and efficient as - well, as a stationery store should be. It was inevitable - it had to come -- if has come. You are cordially jnvited to visit New York's finest and most complete stationery store. -- GEN ER L "ß ST TIQNERS =- 260 W. Fifty-Seventh Street New York Columbus 0157 . "((X'"\ ..._\Ç..;! , f'" ,, IQ s - " ', ,_-\l'>.a,.. BAS 0 : H ",l - i ()j I51I BrSOM Jg i 1eoftl1el-L Way C J $lreet [rOOl lorVANDERBILT · 5900 The SINGLEøBREASTED JACKET "J oe, my dear. a sho\v \vith you seems so much more thrilling." "Oh, I don't . . . ." " O\v halt that blush, old jemmy. It's not your elegant appeal that does it. It's the jaunty seats you alvvays manage to shovel up. If Bob and \\!ally and the rest \vould only leaFn that Bascom ad- dress. . . ." Is the distmctive choice of the smart New Yorker. .;. .;. .;. .;. -:- ";. Our suits are made 01 the finest imported fabrics and are tÔllored to the requirements of your own individual style in the Enslísh n1c'\nner. Starting .:\t $80. F. K. MARUYAMA ${ co. dapanese Tailors A nd branches at The Bilt1nore, Plaza, Savoy Plaza, Vanderbilt, C0l1l1110dorc, Bel1nont, Astor and St. RegÜ. - 67 W qst 46th Strqqt, Nqw York B ry 4W't 7079 THEi\. TRE TICI{ETS, BOOIZ-S i\.ND ßlli\.Gl\ZINES . . NOVEMBER. ,. 19 2, 9 contains one first-rate feminine charac- ter-and a mean one, too; one fairly good young woman, pictured honestly but without allure; and two dummies of men, who really weren't worth the fight the girls put up for them. As for the first-rate character, she IS a cleverly presented study of a fine woman made cold and artful and scheming by being forced to stand up for herself in a world of stupid Inen- the hard-hunting, hard-riding, stand- ing-far-Parliament type. Through long pages two believable girls play a game for stakes that are too small to wurry about. MIss Bot- tome's novel is one of those English stones that lose much on their trip across the Atlantic. The big hand- some brute, with his man's-world code of honor, is effective in the English scene, but he never has loomed large as a menace on these shores. The spectacle of I\liss Bottome's charming women going berserk over two dull gentlemen is almost as fantastic as would be a story of I\liss Greta Garbo breaking her heart for love of the statue of General Sherman at the entrance to the Park. M ISS LILLIAN LAUFERTY, in case you don't know, used to be the Beatrice Fairfax of the Evening J our- nal. She was the girl who ad vised Brown Eyes not to kiss the young man upon first acquaintance, because even if such a moral stand meant a slight loss of popularity, it would reap respect in the end. All this has nothing to do with the fact that Miss Lauferty's first novel, "The Street of Chains," is an unusually good one. I\liss Lauferty takes a powerful Jewish family, in out- line like the Rothschilds, and shows how the heritage of the J udengasse, even diluted by alien blood, may be as stubborn and domin.:lting and uncom- fortable as any old Norman strain. Hers is a story of the descendants, not of the meek and lowly, but of a Jew SLiss. Miss Lauferty's young Gruen- turms enact their drama in N e\v York, . . o